"Overkill" really really did something special for me. Little niche in my heart still there for that one. But I never bought their albums and god knows we don't really need to hear their most well known songs yet another time. So I don't know.

"Down Under" I thought was quite smashing, and still do. That nagging sax riff in "Who Can It Be Now?" was pleasantly annoying. Can't remember what their other hits sounded like, apart from the titles.

when I was relegated to reviewing reissues in the late 90s, the publicity guy at Sony Legacy once asked: "what do you think our best selling reissue is?" LS: "Uh, Bruce? Aerosmith? Bob Dylan?" Nah, you guessed it. Men at Work.

For the best selling reissue, you would have thought they could have done a better job with selecting the bonus material for the first record. I mean, really, live tracks from the Hay/Ham reunion show in 1996? Plenty of better, and more rare material they could have used.

Ronald Strykert, 51, one of the founders of the band, was arrested Feb. 13 by Los Angeles County sheriff's deputies on an outstanding bench warrant on a charge of making criminal threats.

Strykert threatened to kill the band's lead singer, Colin Hay, in December 2007 in an incident that was handled by the Sheriff Department's Lost Hills-Malibu station, according Jane Robison, a spokeswoman for the Los Angeles County district attorney's office.

The guitarist skipped out last May on his arraignment on a misdemeanor charge of making criminal threats, Robison said.

Btw. I consider "Overkill" to be their best song. "Down Under" was fun and all, but maybe too much of a novelty. "Overkill" was an excellent pop song, partly also thanks to the wonderful sax theme by Ham.